I started smoking a pipe when I was 16 ( that was legal in the uk at the time) I was working with my uncle and asked to try it
What he said. +++++Why did I start smoking a pipe? To be the ultimate "eccentric rebel with a traditionalist bent".
Why do I still smoke a pipe? See previous answer.
Oh: also it tastes good and smells good and helps take a load off at the end of the day.
Nice memories ?I, like many, got into smoking a pipe around the time I went off to college and after following the lead of my grandfather.
I have very many fond memories of spending time with him and enjoying different activities while he smoked his pipe. His house, and especially his office, had the distinct aroma of pipe tobacco. Rarely was he without his pipe. Being his favorite tagalong and eldest grandson, whether we were golfing, running errands, having special lunches, visiting the Tinderbox or the Eckard's Drugs, or watching Astros Baseball or Oilers Football; he was rarely without me either.
He passed away when I was twelve. When I turned 18, per his wishes, my nana passed on his pipes to me. Throughout the years, even though I had a short engagement with cigarettes and a longstanding romance with cigars, smoking a pipe has always been my preferred method of tobacco usage. Mainly I'm sure because of my grandfather, but also because persons and characters I admired smoked a pipe. Becoming a sailor, also like grandpa, I came to embrace maritime heritage and culture... which also included smoking a pipe.
If I thought about it more deeply I am sure I could find other reasons why I began smoking a pipe. These reasons explain very well the beginnings of my journey as well as why I continue smoking a pipe today. Sláinte!
??No, Denial is a River in Egypt, duh!
Same here, smoking a pipe is so much less offensive than my cigarettes and no one complained. Did you smoke unfiltered camels by any chance? That was my tobacco of choice...I've written about co-eds, tweedy profs and such in the past, all of which were, only somewhat, tongue in cheek. When I reached college, the pipe was the only nicotine delivery system I'd not tried. After a short trial period I found the pipe worked best in the dorm room My roomie didn't complain like he did about the acute smell of my Camels and I needed his brains at times when studying (I was a goalie, after all?).
Now? It's all about the nicotine.
Do you live in Vietnam?My father smoked a pipe (usually outside, sometimes inside) and I loved the smell of the burnt tobacco as well as the blends themselves. Something about the shapes also intrigued me. It just seemed to be a very natural thing for me as I was growing up. I loved the accessories, the old 1970's style ashtray, just all of it.
I started smoking a pipe regularly after purchasing a Peterson at the local tobacconist in the area. His blends were fantastic and his knowledge about pipe smoking was encyclopedic. Some of his blends were the finest I ever smoked. He's no longer with us sadly, but his memory lives on. The times in that store, learning about the hobby and trying different blends is something I will never forget.
I think that may have a lot to do with it. There's history in a pipe and in a blend. There's wisdom in there. It's not just tobacco and wood, it's craftsmanship and a link to the past in a way that few other things accomplish in this world. Especially a more complex blend, it's alive in a sense, at least to me. When I greet one of my favorite blends, I don't just stuff it in. I try and figure out what makes it special and unique, pondering the ingredients, proportions, and how it all mixes together into a perfect symphony of balance, history, and perfection.
I guess at this point in my life I'm sort of asking myself why I wouldn't want to smoke a pipe...I got back into the hobby because I missed all these things dearly and was worth the sacrifice of any negative health effects or perceptions of others as being seen (or smelled) as a smoker.